The Worst Scars Are in the Mind

The Worst Scars Are in the Mind

ICL Journal © Verlag Österreich The Worst Scars are in the Mind Deconstructing psychological torture Diarmuid Cunniffe Abstract: Mental Torture is an especially grave violation of human rights because, in its various forms, its ultimate objective is to annul the very identity and personality of the victim. While the physical injuries produced by torture are likely to heal, mental suffering is much more pervasive and likely to persist. The devastating health consequences of threats and fear, humiliation, sensory deprivation and social isolation are evident through the literature, observa- tions of clinicians and reports from victims themselves. This paper adopts a multi-faceted approach to a multi-faceted problem, that is, understanding and interpreting psychological torture. It does so on the premise that there is no ob- stacle, in principle, as to why the law should not accommodate input from other disciplines. This paper attempts to address the issue of whether the definitions and interpretations of mental torture under international human rights law adequately reflect the psychological ‘realities’ as told by survivors and reflected in social, psychiatric and psycho- logical research. Torture, in all its forms, is a complex phenomenon with interacting social, cultural, political, medical, psychological, and biological dimensions. If it is to be eradicated, it is important that a more universal consensus be reached on the assessment of mental suffering inflicted by the forms of ill-treatment considered in this study. Keywords: assessment of suffering, definition of torture, humiliation, inter-american system of human rights, inter- disciplinarity of human rights, international human rights law, mental torture, psychological torture, threats, torture I. Introduction Torture is the most blatant negation of the essence of the human being… It is the ultimate in human corruption.1 Torture has been widely practiced during the entire recorded history of mankind. Aristotle, for example, listed torture alongside 'laws, witnesses, contracts… [and] oaths' as a 'non-technical means of persuasion'.2 In Roman law, it was considered customary for torture to be applied to uncover the commission of a crime.3 Simi- larly, under Roman influence, English common law allowed torture as a means of eliciting a confession or sim- ply for obtaining evidence from an uncooperative witness.4 Early European travellers to the kingdoms of the Asian monarchs also reported that in Japanese and Chinese criminal codes, for example, torture was permitted when a confession was a requirement for punishment.5 It was only in 1808 that Napoleon's Code d'instruction criminelle initiated the prohibition of torture.6 Nowadays, in a myriad of international Declarations, Treaties and Conventions the international community has made very clear its total disapproval of torture under any circumstances.7 Furthermore, an international 1 Juvenile Reeducation Institute v. Paraguay, Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACtHR) Series C No. 112 (2 September 2004) (Expert Testimony of Ana Clerico-Deutsch, Psychologist) 48. 2 Johan D Van der Vyver, 'Torture as a Crime under International Law' (2004) 67 ALBLREV 427. 3 Ibid 428. 4 Ibid 429. 5 Elena Nightingale and others (ed), The Breaking of Bodies and Minds: Torture, Psychiatric Abuse and the Health Professions (W.H. Freeman, New York 1985) 8. 6 Ibid. 7 See for example Universal Declaration of Human Rights (adopted 10 December 1948) UNGA Res 217 A(III) (UDHR) art 5; International Covenant on Civil and Political and Civil Rights (adopted 16 December 1966, entered into force 23 March 1976) 999 UNTS 171 (ICCPR), art 7; Convention on the Rights of the Child 1 ICL Journal © Verlag Österreich juridical system of absolute prohibition of all forms of torture – both physical and psychological – has been established and is now part of the sphere of international jus cogens. This has been recognised by both interna- tional criminal tribunals for Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia (ICTR and ICTY), by all three regional human rights regimes, by the United Nations Committee Against Torture (CAT), by judges in numerous domestic juris- dictions, by authoritative statements of international law, including the Third Restatement of Foreign Relations Law of the United States (US), and by the Universal Islamic Declaration of Human Rights.8 Torture may be physical or psychological or both. Jurists in the 13th Century, for example, spoke of the mental effects of torture based on the supposed derivation of tormentum from torquens mentem 'the twisting of the mind: since, by the suffering of the body, the mind is therefore turned'.9 It is thus not only a gross viola- tion of the body, but also of the mind. While there may be a consensus that certain methods of physical ill- treatment amount to torture, the same cannot as readily be said for those that inflict mental suffering.10 The boundaries are less susceptible to definition than physical torture. This has also been recognised, for example, by the International Committee for the Red Cross (ICRC) which, after more than a century of visits to detain- ees, possesses a large body of knowledge on the subject of torture. Its Chief Medical Co-ordinator recently observed that interrogators often 'take pride in the fact that they do not resort to "crude physical methods" in their work, but rely only on psychological methods which they do not consider as torture'.11 He then called for 'a discussion on what exactly is meant by the term "psychological torture"'.12 These observations are pertinent because, in spite of the abundance of legal rules outlawing torture, most fail to define it. It is as though we all assume we have the same working definition or conception of torture in mind. Moreover, where definitions exist, they are not the same. The definition contained in the Inter-American System (IAS), for example, contains some important differences from that contained in the United Nations Convention against Torture (UNCAT). This set of legal rules seems to have generated confusion about the defi- nition of torture.13 This confusion manifests itself in different ways. The former UNSRT Manfred Nowak, for example, has pointed out that the definition of torture in national criminal codes often relates to the infliction of injuries only.14 Furthermore, while the definition of torture in UNCAT suggests otherwise, there is a lack of uni- versal consensus as to whether 'mental suffering' alone may amount to torture. This has become apparent, for example, in the public discourse on torture in the US during the 'war on terror'. In the course of this debate, practices such as solitary confinement, sleep and sensory deprivation, the in- fliction of threats or other humiliating tactics on detainees have been described as 'torture lite' or simply 'abuse'.15 Liberals argued that 'torture lite' techniques might be permissible in some circumstances such as fighting terrorism.16 They further argued that a distinction should be made between 'torture' and 'torture lite'.17 The argument goes that, as the victim is not assaulted, the 'severity of pain and suffering' criterion (here meaning physical only) is not met. This line of argumentation is effectively used to manipulate wider public opinion, which has largely come to consider torture to be mainly a 'physical phenomenon', thus accepting the (flawed) reasoning that without physical assault there is no torture. The American Red Cross, for example, (adopted on 20 November 1989, entered into force on 2 September 1990) 1577 UNTS 3 (CRC) art 37(a); Con- vention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms 1950 (European Convention on Human Rights, as amended) (ECHR), art 3; Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union 2000, art 4; Inter- American Convention on Human Rights (Adopted 22 November 1969, entered into force 18 July 1978) (ACHR) article 5(2). 8 Ronald Slye and others, International Criminal Law and its enforcement: Cases and Materials (Founda- tion Press, New York 2010) 544. 9 Edward Peters, Torture (B. Blackwell, New York 1985) 55. 10 Irfan Neziroglu, 'A Comparative Analysis of Mental and Psychological Suffering as Torture, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment under International Human Rights Treaty Law' (2007) 4 EHRR 1. 11 Hernan Reyes, 'The worst scars are in the mind: psychological torture' (2007) 89 IRRC 591. 12 Ibid. 13 Paola Gaeta, 'When is the Involvement of State Officials a Requirement for the Crime of Torture' (2008) 6 JICJ 183. 14 UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) 'Report of the Special Rapporteur on Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, Manfred Nowak' (5 February 2010) UN Doc. A/HRC/13/39/Add.5 [74]. 15 Jessica Wolfendale, 'The Myth of Torture Lite' (2009) 23 EIAJ 47. 16 Ibid. 17 Ibid. 2 ICL Journal © Verlag Österreich recently conducted a poll which found that almost 60 percent of American teenagers felt techniques such as water-boarding or sleep deprivation are sometimes acceptable and that, overall, teenagers are 'significantly more in favor of torture than older adults'.18 The active use of psychological interrogation tactics is not limited to the above example. Their use has been frequently documented in other recent conflicts. These include, inter alia, the treatment of Tibetan prisoners in China and Palestinian detainees in Israel.19 The point is that psychological tactics generate considerable dis- agreement across jurisdictions. They are ambiguous almost by design and are the product of deliberate at- tempts to engineer tactics that provoke subtle forms of pain and at the same time leaving minimal evidence of brutality.20 The misery such tactics produce is entirely 'in the mind'. Since many such tactics involve subjecting detainees to visceral sensations that people regularly experience to some degree or another (i.e. feeling fa- tigued, lonely), they are less recognisably painful than more shocking forms of physical brutality.21 The validity of the torture standard, however, depends on the accuracy with which courts and policy makers can determine the 'severity of pain' that a particular interrogation tactic provokes.

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